Author

admin

Browsing

A bipartisan group of House lawmakers has introduced legislation aimed at keeping COVID-19 pandemic-era Obamacare subsidies alive for another two years.

Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., and Tom Suozzi, D-N.Y., co-chairs of the Problem Solvers Caucus, have told reporters for weeks that they are working on such a measure as Capitol Hill scrambles to avert skyrocketing health insurance costs for millions of Americans beginning next year.

Democrats in Congress voted twice during the pandemic to expand the availability of premium tax credits for Obamacare, also called the Affordable Care Act (ACA), to make sure more Americans had access to healthcare coverage.

Those enhanced subsidies are set to expire at the end of this year.

A majority of House Republicans have signaled they are not open to extending them, at least not without significant reforms. Conservatives in particular have panned the enhanced subsidies as a COVID-era relic that benefited insurance companies rather than Americans themselves.

But some GOP lawmakers have joined Democrats in warning that failing to extend them at least temporarily at this point will result in millions of Americans seeing their healthcare premiums skyrocket while Congress does nothing to help.

House Republicans are now largely looking to Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and their leaders for the next move.

Johnson has said he intends to hold a vote on some kind of healthcare package before the end of this year, while panning Obamacare as a long-broken system badly in need of reforms.

One House GOP source told Fox News Digital that they expect Johnson to lay out a roadmap on healthcare at Republican lawmakers’ weekly conference meeting on Wednesday morning.

The bipartisan bill released Tuesday is being pushed by a group of four Democrats and four Republicans — Fitzpatrick, Suozzi, along with Reps. Don Bacon, R-Neb., Rob Bresnahan, R-Pa., Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., Jared Golden, D-Maine, Don Davis, D-N.C., and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, D-Wash.

Fitzpatrick called the legislation ‘a practical, people-first fix that protects families now, while preserving the space to keep working toward a stronger, smarter, more affordable healthcare system.’

‘When the stakes are this high, responsible governance means securing 80% of what families need today rather than risking 100% of nothing tomorrow,’ he said in a statement.

In addition to extending the enhanced Obamacare subsidies for two years, the bill also ‘stops unauthorized plan and subsidy changes by requiring consent and prompt notification before any modifications take effect,’ according to a press release.

It would also rein in pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) profits and expand access to health savings accounts (HSAs) — two reforms that other rank-and-file House Republicans have been advocating for.

But it’s not clear yet if House GOP leaders would put the bill on the floor for a chamber-wide vote, nor if it has the backing of their Democratic counterparts.

Still, there are ways to force a vote on legislation without leadership’s approval. One of those methods is called a discharge petition, which requires signatures from a majority of House lawmakers to override leaders’ wishes to vote on a given bill.

Fox News Digital asked Fitzpatrick last week if a discharge petition could be filed, but he did not give a direct answer, instead saying that the bill would be released imminently.

Bacon told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that a discharge petition is a realistic possibility but cautioned, ‘It would be wiser to see if we have 60 votes in the Senate first.’

The plan is one of several put forward by House Republicans to deal with the looming healthcare cliff.

Republican Study Committee Chairman August Pfluger, R-Texas, introduced legislation last week to allow states to opt out of Obamacare altogether while radically expanding the availability of HSAs.

And late last week, a bipartisan group of House lawmakers introduced a plan to extend the enhanced Obamacare subsidies — with income caps and extra guardrails against fraud — for a year.

The Senate, meanwhile, is expected to vote this week on Democrat-led legislation to extend the enhanced subsidies, though it’s likely to fail. It’s not yet clear if Senate Republicans will put up their own counter-proposal.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Former Vice President Kamala Harris declared herself to be a ‘historic figure’ on Tuesday and touted that there will be a marble bust of her constructed in Congress.

Harris made the statement during an interview with The New York Times regarding her upcoming book, ‘107 Days,’ telling the newspaper that she no longer feels ‘burdened’ by the need to achieve a place in history.

‘I understand the focus on ’28 and all that,’ she told the Times. ‘But there will be a marble bust of me in Congress. I am a historic figure like any Vice President of the United States ever was.’

‘Thousands of people are coming to hear my voice. Thousands and thousands,’ she added about her book tour. ‘Every place we’ve gone has been sold out.’

Harris’ comments reference a tradition in the Senate of commissioning a bust of vice presidents after they leave office. The tradition has held strong since the late 1800s.

The former vice president has used the release of her upcoming book as a chance to settle scores with figures throughout the Democratic Party, from Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro to former President Joe Biden himself.

Harris writes in her book that Shapiro had asked her staff lots of questions, including ‘how he might arrange to get Pennsylvania artists’ work on loan from the Smithsonian.’ She also accused him of wanting to be involved in every decision and said she reminded him, ‘a vice president is not a co-president.’

Many political observers had scratched their heads when Harris selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz over Shapiro to be her running mate.

‘She wrote that in her book? That’s complete and utter bull—-,’ Shapiro said in an interview with the Atlantic. ‘I can tell you that her accounts are just blatant lies.’

‘I did ask a bunch of questions,’ he continued. ‘Wouldn’t you ask questions if someone was talking to you about forming a partnership and working together?’

‘I mean, she’s trying to sell books and cover her a–,’ he said, before backtracking. ‘I shouldn’t say ‘cover her a–.’ I think that’s not appropriate.’

‘She’s trying to sell books. Period,’ he concluded.

The book also blames Biden’s White House for sidelining her and failing to support her throughout their term in office and during her contest against Trump.

‘Getting anything positive said about my work or any defense against untrue attacks was almost impossible,’ her book reads.

She also argued the White House was happy to let her ‘shoulder the blame’ for the border crisis.

Fox News’ Hannah Panreck contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

While Senate Republicans work to coalesce behind a fix to expiring Obamacare subsidies, one Republican has a plan that he says bridges Democrats’ desires and GOP demands.

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., detailed his plan, dubbed the Marshall Plan, in an interview with Fox News Digital that he pitched as a starting point that could bring both Republicans and Democrats to the table to hash out a bipartisan solution to the subsidies, and further, Obamacare as a whole.

Boiled down, Marshall’s legislative package would do two things: extend the enhanced subsidies as they are for one year, and then convert those subsidies into health savings accounts (HSAs).

That approach, in broad terms, bridges the gap between Senate Democrats’ desire to extend the subsidies and the GOP’s wishes to pivot the subsidy money into HSAs, which has the backing of President Donald Trump.

‘We want to turn patients into consumers again. That’s the whole key here: My plan doesn’t impact just the 24 million people on Obamacare. It’s going to impact everybody’s cost of health care,’ Marshall said. ‘So if we pair bumping up savings accounts with price tags, we’re going to turn patients into consumers again, and they’ll do magic things out there. I think of this being like the magic shopping weeks, Black Friday and Cyber Monday.’

Along with extending the enhanced subsidies and transitioning them to HSAs, Marshall’s plan would also eliminate zero-cost premiums by requiring a minimum payment of $5 per month, require people to provide a government-issued ID in a bid to eliminate fraud, and include stricter enforcement of Hyde Amendment requirements that taxpayer dollars don’t fund abortions by denying the premium credits from being used on abortion procedures.

Abortion funding has proven a tricky situation in ongoing bipartisan talks, a point Marshall acknowledged but countered that he couldn’t understand ‘why by just stating what the law is and making it even clearer,’ Democrats object to it.

The plan would also bar gender transition procedures from being covered by plans on the Obamacare exchange and permanently fund cost-sharing reduction payments, which Marshall and several economists who reviewed his plan estimated would save $30 billion on healthcare and lower premiums by roughly 11%.

The end of the one-year extension of the subsidies would also include a wind-down transition period until 2032, reducing the enhanced premium tax credits each year by 20%.

The Obamacare issue is one that Marshall has thought about for over a decade and tried to tackle legislatively when he was a member of the House.

‘Forever, it feels like it’s been forever,’ Marshall said. ‘Here we are, 15 years later, premiums have doubled. Out-of-pocket costs — it went from $1,000 a year to $15,000 a year.’

While he hopes for a bipartisan product at the end of the road, Marshall’s main objective is to present a package that can get strong support among his Republican colleagues. Senate Republicans are expected to discuss which option they want to run with during a closed-door meeting on Tuesday.

He noted that bipartisan talks had picked up recently, but that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., was proving to be a major roadblock.

‘I think the talks are increasing, and they’re getting better, but there’s a political reality to this as well,’ Marshall said. ‘I don’t think Chuck Schumer wants us to be successful. He doesn’t want us to fix Obamacare. He wants this country to be in chaos come November of next year.’

It’s also one of several Republican plans in the mix, with others either focusing only on abandoning the enhanced subsidies for HSAs or extending the subsidies for two years.

And time is running out for Republicans to present their plan to counter Senate Democrats’ proposal, with a vote on the subsidies set for Thursday. That could be a tall task for Republicans, Marshall said.

‘I think it’ll be really hard to have enough momentum to get something that’s going to allow the enhanced premiums to continue,’ he said. ‘I want to emphasize, though the original Obamacare is still in place, and it’s going to cover over 80% of people’s premiums as is. I think we need to do more than just stop the hemorrhaging. Our bill stops the hemorrhaging.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The NBA Cup knockout rounds have arrived, presenting an opportunity for one team to claim some early supremacy in the 2025-26 season.

And the field is fascinating, particularly in the West, where three of the Top 5 teams in the conference – including the top two in the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Los Angeles Lakers – will try to win some hardware.

And it is those Thunder, winners of 15 consecutive games, who remain on historic pace and have a very real chance to challenge the 2015-16 Golden State Warriors’ NBA record for most wins in a season (74).

Not every top team is still competing for the NBA Cup, however, including the best team in the Eastern Conference – both in the standings and in USA TODAY Sports’ NBA power rankings after Week 7 of the 2025-26 regular season.

USA TODAY Sports NBA power rankings

Note: Records and stats through Dec. 8. Parentheses show movement from last week’s rankings

NBA Week 7 power rankings: Top 5

  • 1. Oklahoma City Thunder, 23-1 (—)
  • 2. Denver Nuggets, 17-6 (+3)
  • 3. Detroit Pistons, 19-5 (—)
  • 4. Los Angeles Lakers, 17-6 (-2)
  • 5. Houston Rockets, 15-6 (—)

With Luka Dončić missing a pair of games due to the birth of his second daughter, the Lakers had to scramble a bit and are 2-2 over their last four. The schedule has been softer as of late, but the Nuggets are getting massive games out of Jamal Murray, who’s averaging 36.3 points over his last three games. And the Rockets suffered a pair of disappointing losses recently (to the Mavericks and Jazz), but they’re second in defensive rating (110.7) and net rating (10.8).

NBA Week 7 power rankings: Nos. 6-10

  • 6. New York Knicks, 16-7 (—)
  • 7. Boston Celtics, 15-9 (+8)
  • 8. Minnesota Timberwolves, 15-8 (+1)
  • 9. San Antonio Spurs, 15-7 (-2)
  • 10. Toronto Raptors, 15-10 (—)

The Celtics have won five in a row, including games against the Cavaliers, Knicks, Lakers and Raptors. With Boston protecting the ball and ranking first in turnover rate (12.3%), the offense is rolling; the Celtics trail only the Nuggets in rating (122.0). Minnesota is plugging along with its five-game winning streak and the best thing the Timberwolves are doing is sharing the ball; three different players – Anthony Edwards, Julius Randle and Jaden McDaniels – have led the team in scoring during the winning streak. Victor Wembanyama (calf) is approaching a full month of being sidelined, but De’Aaron Fox has taken over the San Antonio offense.

NBA Week 7 power rankings: Nos. 11-15

  • 11. Phoenix Suns, 13-10 (+1)
  • 12. Orlando Magic, 14-10 (+2)
  • 13. Miami Heat, 14-10 (-5)
  • 14.  Atlanta Hawks, 14-11 (-3)
  • 15. Cleveland Cavaliers, 14-11 (-2)

The Suns have been aggressive on defense, leading the NBA in steals per game (10.9), which has fueled their offense. Opposing defenses have thrown a ton of zone at the Heat, slowing down their pace and efficiency, leading to the current three-game losing streak. And the Cavaliers are tumbling, losing five of their last seven games.

NBA Week 7 power rankings: Nos. 16-20

  • 16. Golden State Warriors, 13-12 (+1)
  • 17. Philadelphia 76ers, 13-10 (-1)
  • 18. Memphis Grizzlies, 11-13 (—)
  • 19. Dallas Mavericks, 9-16 (+3)
  • 20. Milwaukee Bucks, 10-15 (-1)

In the face of injuries, Warriors two-way player Pat Spencer has been electric and has helped stabilize the team’s offense. The Mavericks are far more competitive now with Anthony Davis back on the floor, with recent victories over the Nuggets, Heat and Rockets. And the Bucks, in the face of the swirling rumors about the future of star player Giannis Antetokounmpo, have lost 10 of their last 12 games.

NBA Week 7 power rankings: Nos. 21-25

  • 21. Portland Trail Blazers, 9-15 (—)
  • 22. Utah Jazz, 8-15 (+2)
  • 23. Chicago Bulls, 9-14 (-3)
  • 24. Charlotte Hornets, 7-17 (-1)
  • 25. Sacramento Kings, 6-17 (+2)

The Bulls are in total fee fall, owners of the NBA’s longest active losing streak (seven games), and some of those defeats have come against some of the weaker teams in the league. Keyonte George (22.2 points and 6.7 assists per game) has shined for the Jazz, and the Trail Blazers need to limit their turnovers, giving the ball away a league-high 17.0 times per game.

 NBA Week 7 power rankings: Nos. 26-30

  • 26. Indiana Pacers, 5-18 (-1)
  • 27. Brooklyn Nets, 6-17 (+2)
  • 28. Los Angeles Clippers, 6-18 (-2)
  • 29. Washington Wizards, 3-19 (+1)
  • 30. New Orleans Pelicans, 3-21 (-2)

The Pacers are finally trending closer to being healthy, and the Clippers continue to have a subpar defense, ranking 25th in rating (118.6). The Pelicans will be without Zion Williamson for the near future, and a full rebuild may be the only move.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 6-foot-4 South Carolina native earned her second WNBA scoring title, third Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY) award and fourth MVP (the first in league history to accomplish the feat) weeks before winning her third championship. The now two-time Finals MVP and the Aces swept the Phoenix Mercury in the WNBA Finals.

Wilson is the first player in WNBA or NBA history to win a championship, Finals MVP, regular-season MVP and DPOY award in the same season. She’s also one of four players in the WNBA or NBA to win four MVP trophies before the age of 30. Fittingly, Wilson wore a Thanos-inspired glove to Las Vegas’ championship parade earlier this year to celebrate.

“When you’ve collected everything, that’s Thanos,” Wilson told TIME. “And this year, I collected everything. I don’t really talk much s—, I mean crap. I kind of let my game do it. This was my biggest moment of doing it, because no one’s ever done what I’ve done. And I think people really needed to understand that.” 

Wilson was part of several TIME honorees for 2025, including KPop Demon Hunters as the 2025 Breakthrough of the Year, YouTube’s Neal Mohan as the CEO of the Year and Leonardo DiCaprio as the Entertainer of the Year.

Her ascension to the greatest year in her career did not come without some struggles. At the midway point of the WNBA season, the Aces were sitting at .500 and were on the receiving end of a 50-plus blowout loss to the Minnesota Lynx.

Then, a switch flipped. Las Vegas rattled off 16 straight wins to get to the postseason, and endured back-to-back playoff series that required the team to play every game possible (three against the Seattle Storm and five against the Indiana Fever) before getting to the Finals.“Sometimes you’ve just got to get knocked down to get built back up,” Wilson said. “I think 2025 was a wake-up call that I needed, to let me know that I can’t be satisfied with anything. There’s somebody out there that’s going to try to take your job. You need to make sure you’re great at it, every single day.”

Wilson further cemented her legacy and perhaps her TIME Athlete of the Year award when she hit a game-winning shot against the Mercury during Game 3 of the WNBA Finals. The shot, released with a fitting 2.2 seconds left on the clock (a subtle ode to her No. 22 jersey), cemented the series for the Aces and catapulted Wilson into the conversations for the WNBA’s greatest player of all time. Still, the WNBA star wouldn’t quite put herself in that category just yet. That said, she believes that she’s making it hard for people to chase after her.

‘When you think about a lot of GOATs, they have those career-defining shots that solidify you as the best…’, she said. ‘I didn’t really have one of those. I had championships, yeah. But it was never really like a moment of like, ‘Whoooooooo. That’s why she is who she is. She’s exactly who she thinks she is.’”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2026 Sports Power Brunch: Celebrating the Most Powerful Women in Sports™ awards will take place in San Francisco, California, on Wednesday, February 4, 2026, during the week of Super Bowl 60. Emmy award-winning host and NBC Sports broadcaster Maria Taylor tops the list of women slated to be honored.

Taylor has hosted NBC’s ‘Football Night in America’ since 2022 and is the network’s lead studio host for its NBA and WNBA coverage. As one of the most dynamic women in sports, she has also handled hosting duties for several high-profile events, including the Olympics, the Super Bowl, Roland-Garros and the Met Gala. Taylor will be recognized as one of the driving forces in sports at the seventh annual Sports Power Brunch.

‘You work really hard in an industry that’s dominated by men. You never know when you’re gonna have an opportunity to be celebrated in a way that makes you feel good,’ Taylor shared with USA TODAY about being a 2026 honoree. ‘It means everything.’

This year’s event, hosted by ESPN’s Elle Duncan (with Monica McNutt on purple carpet duties), will celebrate women who continue to break barriers and lead with vision, purpose and power. Through the theme, ‘Power Shift: Women’s Economic Impact on Sports’, the Sports Power Brunch will shed light on the transformative influence of women and how they are redefining the business of sports in everything from leadership to media to innovation.

NFL senior vice president of global brand and consumer marketing Marissa Solis, Athletes Unlimited Softball League commissioner Kim Ng, San Francisco 49ers chief people officer Harpreet Basran, Golden State Warriors senior vice president of marketing Amanda Chin and Las Vegas Aces head coach Becky Hammon, will also receive awards.

Over the last decade, women’s sports have blossomed with increasing viewership numbers and more investment. Taylor gave the example that just four years ago, the NCAA Division I women’s basketball tournament could not use the March Madness branding. Though that has since changed, the NBC Sports host noted that this was one of the first major shifts in steps toward gender equity and valuing a special and unique product. Investment in gender equality has continued to extend into other areas, including television, where there are more women as directors and producers or in front of the camera.

‘You can’t be ignored. That’s where I think we’re getting to,’ she said. ‘It’s so spectacular, phenomenal ― you can’t ignore it anymore. You can’t ignore the excellence that women bring to sports.’

‘We’re seeing it on so many different levels that girls can wake up, turn left, and be like, ‘I would like to work in football,’ and there’s a role. You can turn right and be like, ‘I would like to play in the WNBA,’ and you know that is a viable option. Not only that, it can be fiscally responsible for you, too. You’re not just being like ‘I want to play for the love of the game.’ You can play because you’re gonna get paid and have health insurance and maternity leave and all of these things.’

Taylor believes that as the business landscape of sports changes and more women are fighting for what they are worth, it isn’t just about existing; the goal should be growing. Taylor has been keeping a pulse on the ongoing WNBA CBA negotiations, one of the biggest stories in women’s sports this year. She says the women who are negotiating right now have the right mindset.

In her opinion, the things they are asking of league leadership and seeking in negotiations, ‘says that women hold the power.’ Taylor said it’s seemingly one of the first times in the history of women’s sports where that’s is the case. She says they have to do ‘whatever it takes to hold on tight.’ In that same vein, as women’s sports continue to grow, Taylor said it’s important to stay true to the history of the space.

‘One thing that I think we have in men’s sports, you know who Red Auerbach is … You’re gonna know who Dr. J is and all those. I hope that our Dr. J’s and Sheryl Swoopes’ and Lisa Leslie’s ― all the people that we didn’t have the time or bandwidth or capacity to pay attention to when they were in their prime, that we just remember them as we move forward and just continue to honor them.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A Dominican Republic appeals court ordered a new trial for Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco, who has already been convicted of sexually abusing a minor.

In June, Franco received a two-year suspended sentence after his attorneys sought to have the conviction overturned. Authorities wanted a five-year jail term for the 24-year-old Franco.

Franco was arrested last year and accused of having a relationship with a 14-year-old girl and of having money sent to the girl’s mother for consent to the relationship.

‘The court understood that there were many flaws, many omissions…many issues, and decided to send the case to a new trial,’ said Teodosio Jáquez, Franco’s attorney.

Franco has not played for the Rays since Aug. 12, 2023. He was formally charged in the Dominican Republic with sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of a minor and human trafficking in July 2024 and placed on Major League Baseball’s restricted list, where he still remains.

Franco signed an 11-year, $182 million guaranteed contract with the Rays in 2021 and has not been paid since he was charged.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

International Ice Hockey Federation officials insist a slightly shorter rink will not compromise safety at the 2026 Winter Games in Italy. However, NHL players set to compete in the games next February are more concerned about the potential quality of the ice.

NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told reporters Monday, Dec. 8 at the league’s board of governors meetings in Colorado Springs that if players don’t feel the quality of the ice is safe, ‘then we’re not going to play.’

The Athletic reported last week that the size of the surface rink had fueled concerns as elite NHL players return to the Olympics for the first time since 2014. Meanwhile, building delays at the Santagiulia Arena in Milan have pushed its completion date back to Feb. 2, just three days before the women’s tournament is scheduled to begin.

The men’s tournament starts on Feb. 11.

Daly told NHL owners he didn’t believe the construction issues were ‘insurmountable,’ but said the league was upping its efforts to make sure the games are safe and the ice is playable.

The quality of the ice is also a concern with multiple games each day being played over the course of three weeks. A test event is scheduled for the main rink from Jan. 9-11.

‘While these dimensions differ slightly from a typical NHL rink, they are consistent with IIHF regulations, match the rink size used at the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games and are fully consistent with the dimensions the NHL requires as part of its Global Series Game arena specifications,’ the federation said in a statement released by the Milano Cortina Foundation.

The IIHF approved a 60-meter (196.85 foot) by 26-meter surface in Milan, which is more than three feet shorter than the 200-foot length required by the NHL. Daly said the league just found out about the dimensions last week, but he remains ‘cautiously optimistic’ all issues will be resolved.

The dimensions of the Olympic rink will be the same as the rink in Stockholm, Sweden, where the Pittsburgh Penguins and Nashville Predators played last month in the NHL Global Series.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Attorneys for the Los Angeles Angels aimed to paint a longer arc of drug and alcohol abuse by Tyler Skaggs as the late pitcher’s wife and mother testified in the wrongful-death lawsuit against the club Monday, Dec. 8.

Skaggs died in July 2019 after ingesting an Oxycodone pill laced with Fentanyl provided by former Angels communications director Eric Kay, who is serving a 22-year sentence after a criminal trial in Texas. Skaggs’ 2013 Percocet addiction and use of opioids were well-established, but attorneys for the franchise attempted to establish that Skaggs’ use preceded that period.

The left-hander was in the Arizona Diamondbacks system before a trade to the Angels and a former Diamondbacks minor leaguer, Eric Smith, testified that Skaggs took opioids recreationally as early as 2011, according to The Athletic.

The defense produced a 2011 text exchange between Skaggs and former major league infielder Mike Olt in which the pitcher asked, ‘Yo what’s good its Skaggs I know Smitty (Eric Smith) texted but I ran out of pain pills you know anyone with them.’

Texts from Skaggs to Carli, along with his wedding groomsmen, were also displayed, with Skaggs texting his groomsmen after the wedding, ‘I blacked hard,’ according to The Athletic. When Angels attorney Stephen Ladsous asked Carli if that was appropriate behavior, she replied, ‘He deserved to have a good time at his wedding.’

On the night Skaggs died after drinking alcohol – his blood-alcohol content was measured between .12 and .14 – and ingesting the pill, Carli texted him, ‘you have a drinking problem’ after he didn’t respond to several texts.

‘It was me saying something I didn’t mean,’ she said under direct examination.

Skaggs’ mother, Debbie Hetman, who had warned doctors of Skaggs’ struggles with opioids before 2014 elbow surgery, responded to photos of Skaggs drinking by noting the focus was on avoiding pills, not liquor.

‘If he wants to hang out with his friends, so long as he’s staying clean and off Percocet, and not drinking and driving and getting overindulged, I’m good,’ Hetman testified, according to The Athletic.

The Skaggs family is seeking $118 million in lost wages as well as punitive damages. The trial is scheduled to conclude by the end of this week, with closing arguments and deliberations scheduled to begin Dec. 15.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A House Republican is mounting an effort to make it easier for women to keep and raise their babies after birth.

Rep. Ashley Hinson, R-Iowa, is unveiling a bill called the Supporting Healthy Pregnancy Act that would ensure pregnant mothers get financial support from the father even before their child is born, Fox News Digital learned first.

It’s an effort by the Republican Party to affirm its pro-family ideology as Democrats continue to accuse the GOP of being anti-choice while also being unwilling to support women who keep their babies.

Hinson’s bill would require states to establish systems where the biological father of a child is required to pay at least 50% of out-of-pocket costs for medical expenses associated with a pregnancy and delivery, including health insurance premiums.

There are certain limitations on costs incurred, however, and abortion costs are excluded altogether.

The payments must also be requested by the mother before the father is legally obligated to make them.

Single mothers are currently eligible to request a legal order for child support beginning at birth in most states, meaning many are left to deal with the costs associated with pregnancy.

It’s the latest piece in a package of bills Hinson introduced related to helping women through maternity.

Another bill Hinson introduced would mandate that pregnant women in higher education institutions know what rights and resources they have on campus in an effort to give them more options aside from abortion.

A bipartisan bill co-led with Rep. Kristen McDonald Rivet, D-Mich., would expand access to and career training for midwives, particularly in underserved parts of the country.

‘I’m a mom on a mission to make life easier for my fellow moms and families. That’s why I’m working to expand access to maternal care, ensure women have resources throughout pregnancy and beyond, and improve child care options for growing families,’ Hinson, who is running for Senate in Iowa, told Fox News Digital.

‘Strong families make a strong nation, and we should work together to support the parents and women who are building America’s future,’ she said. ‘As a mom of two, I’m proud to be a leader in that fight for Iowa and for families nationwide.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS